You collaborate with actors who are also talented and visionary and come together on a artistic direction within the confines of humanity and realism. The collaboration that you have had with all of these people plays an integral role in its final stage where editing and music are combine to enhance your work. This whole process is very rewarding and I wouldn't trade it for anything.
Each increment of knowledge imparted in this way is so satisfying-and one's ignorance at every stage so consequential-that the process of learning BJJ can become remarkably addictive. I have never experienced anything quite like it.
I lost my temper on stage.
I feel like you have to make art because you have to make it. But the end result of it- that last stage- you have to show it to somebody else to hopefully get a rise or reaction out of them- [to see] if it'll affect someone else.
A screen actor is compensated in the knowledge that millions will see his performance at one time, where only hundreds will see it on the stage.
I'm perfectly fine now if I never went on stage again.
It's one of the craziest feelings to be on stage and know that you were sitting on your bedroom floor when that song came to be and now there's an arena full of people singing it.
The stage is a routine. It keeps you grounded, like a metronome. I find that soothing.
After I got my first laugh on stage, I was hooked.
I wish I was sort of someone like Woody Allen who can stage everything in one long master shot, no coverage; just, you know, that's it.
I'm really alive when I'm on stage.
It's fun to be loose. Just like on stage, all of your great ideas come from looseness.
Fanny! You are killing me!" "No man dies of love but on the stage, Mr. Crawford.
The great actors are the luminous ones. They are the great conductors of the stage.
Faith is almost the bottom line of creativity; it requires a leap of faith any time we undertake a creative endeavor, whether this is going to the easel, or the page, or onto the stage.
I love theater work because of the immediate effect your performance has on the audience. And I love the repetition; I love getting on the same stage for more than a month and reciting the same lines, trying to make a small or large step towards an improvement in my acting.
When I was in school, I was always writing scripts and dressing up as characters. I'd constantly be that guy who'd get up on stage. I used to write imaginary TV shows, like soap operas, for fun.
An 'OMG' of mine would probably be speaking on stage and performing in front of thousands of people!
I love hitting the stage and I don't think I could trade that for sitting in the basement making beats.
My dad was like a stage mother he always pushed me to do what I wanted.